Since 2007, the beginning of the largest economic downturn since the Great Depression, and throughout the slow recovery and continued uncertainty, gun sales in Colorado have soared, based on the number of people getting criminal-background checks.

The number of those checks, required for gun purchases, has climbed 58 percent over the past five years, with spikes this year immediately after the Aurora theater massacre and the abduction and slaying of 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway.

Despite drops in violent crimes in past years, a volatile mix of political and social fears is driving more people to arm themselves, experts say.

Dave Bayer, left, and Richard Taylor, managers of Firing-Line, Colorado's largest gun shop, are answering questions from a customer by phone. (Photos by Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)

As the number of background-check applications continues to increase, social- science professionals and gun enthusiasts say the desire to be armed is a result of an overwhelming sense of danger people believe is around them.

According to Colorado Bureau of Investigation data, last year 245,475 firearm applications were approved out of the 251,307 submitted. The approval figure doesn't provide the scope of gun sales, as a buyer can get multiple guns with a single background check and the state doesn't track gun purchases.

FBI data show that 16.4 million background checks were run nationwide in 2011.

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On Nov. 23, Black Friday, 154,873 would-be gun buyers inundated the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) with the most applications since the system's inception in 1998, said Stephen Fischer Jr., spokesman for the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Division.

The flood of applications was 20 percent higher than applications processed on Black Friday 2011, Fischer said. Twice during the day, the system shut down — once for 18 minutes and again for 14 minutes.

Revolvers are lined up for sale at Firing-Line, an indoor shooting range and Colorado's largest gun shop.

There were 4,028 checks run in Colorado this past Black Friday, said Susan Medina, CBI spokeswoman.

Through media coverage of high-profile violent crimes and crime-related TV shows and movies, people are bombarded with the notions of imminent danger, said Hillary Potter, associate professor of sociology at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

"People need to feel they are protected," said Potter, whose field of concentration is criminology. "They think, 'If the bad guys have guns, I better have one too.' "

"The crime rate has actually dropped since the '90s, but then something happens like Jessica Ridgeway or Aurora," she said. "It feeds the fear."

Following July 20, when a gunman opened fire and killed 12 people and injured at least 58 in an Aurora movie theater, and the Oct. 11 discovery of the mutilated body of 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway, background checks spiked in Colorado, according to CBI data.

Gun applications increased by 5,055 in August from July, and October showed a jump of 2,066 checks from September, bringing the total to 28,002 for the month, according to CBI data. On average, excluding August and October, 23,880 applications have been submitted monthly this year.

Seth Masket, chairman of the political science department at the University of Denver, said he is not sure the fear that gun buyers have is completely from high-profile crimes.

"There is a general fear of Democratic politicians taking away access to guns, despite no moves made to do so," Masket said.

People are aware that crime is down statistically, Masket said, but the root of the fear comes from political change.

In addition, Tim Wadsworth, CU-Boulder associate professor of sociology, said gun ownership has become a movement in and of itself.

"There is a cultural increase in the right to bear arms," he said.

The bottom line seems to be that a larger population in Colorado will continue to arm itself, Potter said.

"There is the feeling that, 'We can't control bad people from getting guns, so don't restrict my rights,' " she said.

Lockheed says object part of 'sensor technology' testing that ended ThursdayWhat the heck is that thing? It's fair to assume that question was on the minds of many people who traveled along Colo. 128 south of Boulder this week if they happened to catch a glimpse of what appeared to be a large, silver projectile perched alongside the highway and pointed north toward town.

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